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Wednesday, 5 March 2014

Yautja - Songs of Descent (Album Review)

Album Type : Full Length

Date Released : 4/2/2014

Label : Forcefield Records

Songs of Descent, album track listing :

1). Path of Descent

2). Denihilist

3). Blinders

4). Concrete Tongue

5). Tar and Blindness

6). Teeth

7). Faith Resigned

8). Path to Ground

9). An Exit

10). A Crawl

11). Of Descent

12). Humility-Humanity

13). A Cleansing Fire

14). Chemical

Bio :

Featuring members
of Coliseum, Gnarwhal, Nameless Cults and more, and hailing from the filthy
underbelly of “Music City,” YAUTJA
forges a potent mix of death metal, grind, and hardcore. Started in Nashville, Tennessee in
January 2010 by vocalist/guitarist Shibby Poole and drummer/vocalist Tyler Coburn, the band
began playing shows locally, released a live tape that August, and did some
touring with then bassist Trey Stallings. In October 2010, bassist/vocalist
Kayhan Vaziri joined the band, and in 2011, YAUTJA released a five-song EP, titled 2011, on Nashville-based label Tapes of a Neon God, which was
followed by an East Coast tour. 2012 saw the band release a split 7” with
Enabler, as well as complete a tour of the Southeast U.S.

Entitled Songs Of Descent, YAUTJA's debut album presents the
band’s ultra-intense metallic, grind-infused, tone-heavy hardcore aggression
with thunderous, organic recording attributes, captured at Dark Art Studios
with Mikey Allred (Inter Arma, Accross Tundras, Hellbender). Burning down
everything in earshot with fourteen hook-laden crushers in just over
thirty-seven minutes, Forcefield Records will release Songs Of Descent on LP and digitally in early February 2014; the
digital version mastered by Mikey Allred and the vinyl mastered by Zack Allen
of Obsidian Eye Studios (Loss, Recluse, Sky Burial).

The Band :

Shibby Poole | Guitars, Vocals

Tyler Coburn | Drums, Vocals

Kayhan Vaziri | Bass, Vocals

Review :

Sometimes, things can be too clean-cut, too
clinical. Sometimes you need to get
dirty. Maybe even filthy. And here is where Nashville’s Yautja come in. Grimier than a peat bog bath, murkier than a
week-old laundry basket, these guys have made an album so grim, so gripping, I
couldn’t help but become totally immersed in their sludgy concoction of riffs
and rage. After all, the album’s called
‘Songs of Descent’, and I felt like getting dragged down to their eerily
brilliant depths. And I get the feeling
all those who listen to this will feel the same way, too.

For starters, this is one hell of a big album:
fourteen tracks of raw, ravaging sonic anger that grinds at your flesh and
rends your eardrums asunder. Yautja’s
riffs are fuzzy, frenzied and unrelenting; each of the three members shares
vocal duties too, which just enforces just how intense this collective is when
it comes to crafting dark music. The
playing style itself is loose and very punky, slamming chords and riffs hitting
your speakers like a set of tattooed knuckles.
One set says ‘FUCK’; the other ‘YOU’.

If you want a comparison to other bands out there, I’d
say Yautja were quite like Nails: a bit rougher, a little bit filthier, but
still with that sinister groove and malicious musical intent. They also have that Melvins brand of oozing
riffery, which makes for very potent musical alchemy. Check out the track ‘Of Descent’ and feel the
pounding drums of Tyler Coburn fairly smash your teeth in, as Shibby Poole’s
guitar and Kayhan Vaziri’s bass put the boot in to your prone and twitching
form, and see what I mean. This song is
the monolith of the album, over five minutes of snarling distortion and vicious
vocals. Once it comes to its feedback-scorched
ending, you’ll have felt like a bulldozer has rumbled its way over you. Yep.
That kind of heavy.

In fact, each of these fourteen terror tracks is an
example of crushing sludge at its most filthy.
‘Denihilist’ is a shouting affair of bar-room brawl metal, ‘Teeth’ rocks
and rolls like a ship caught in
razorblade storm, and ‘Humility – Humanity’ is a downright ball breaker
of a song, designed to make you listen in open-mouthed awe at the brutal
spectacle. And these instances I’ve
highlighted for you are only the tip of this iceberg of sludge: it’s up to you
to delve to the depths and discover a treasure of your own.

In short, this is an album of grime, hardcore, doom,
and discovery. Yautja is a band of
purpose: their music is bold, uncompromising, and deliciously dark. If you feel like your metal life has been too
ordered of late, take a walk on the wild side and succumb to the ‘Songs of
Descent’.

Band Submissions

To those bands who have recently issued their first demo or album via bandcamp and would like to be featured on our 666 Pack Review or considered for a full review or stream please contact Aaron via email including your EPK, band bio, album file or download code, including artwork.

To those bands issuing their sophomore record and so on and would like to be considered for a review or stream on the blog. Get in touch using the same address above

We will consider bands from any genre but exclusively stoner, sludge, doom, psych, post-metal, experimental, black-metal etc. (Whilst I would like to respond to every email, this is not always possible.) Thanks